Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Tickets to' fortune

Old sweepstakes and lottery tickets are collected for their
charming illustrations, dates and historical value

By RAMON N. VILLEGAS

DON'T throwaway
those old sweepstakes tickets. You may still be a winner! There are people

who collect them - not just here, but also abroad. The
prices of rarer ones are quoted in

US dollars.

1851 Real Loteria Filipina . The 1st lottery ticket

Over the centuries, governments frequently used lotteries
to supplement income from taxation. The earliest
state lotteries were organized in France
in 1520. In 1680, England held a lottery to raise funds for improving
London's water supply equipment. Spain developed the gordo, and Ireland, the
sweepstakes. Lotteries were popular in the United States, but anomalies forced
the federal government to eventually ban the sale of tickets across state lines
and through the mail in 1890. No government-sponsored lotteries were held in
the US between the 1890s and 1963.

In the Philippines, a private enterprise called the Empresa de Reales Loteria Espaiiolas de
Filipinas held lotteries as early as 1833.
By a royal order dated January 29,1850,
the Spanish queen established the Real
Renta de Loteria. The Real Loteria Filipina was administered by the Intendant of the Army and Superintendent-General
delegated by the Finance Department (Hacienda Publica), as drawn up in an
implementing order signed June 27, 1850 by Juan de la Matta. Initially, the tickets
were to be sold only in the provinces of Tondo (national capital region),
Bulacan, Pampanga, Pangasinan, the Ilocos, Nueva Ecija, Bataan, Cavite, Laguna,
Batangas, Tayabas, Camarines and Albay.

Real Loteria Filipina ticket vendor (Source: eBay)

For the first draw, the prize for a whole ticket was P2, and half ticket, PI, and one fourth of a
ticket, 4 reales. A total of P15,000
was to be distributed to the winners as follows: 1 winner of 5,000, 1 of 2,000,
1 of 1,000, 1 of 500,20 winners of 100 each (2,000), 50 winners of 50 each
(2,500), 50 winners of 32 each (1,600), and 25 winners of 16 each (400), for a
total of 149 winners.

Real Loteria Filipina Lottery Seals

There were monthly draws from January 21,1851 to July 19, 1898, with the implementing rules as
well as the prize money being changed over time. Later, the prize money was divided
into four shares, and for special draws, eight shares (as indicated on the back
of the tickets). In the middle years, the pot was divided into 10 and 12
shares. By the 1890s, there were 20 shares.

Real Loteria Filipina tickets were produced in four designs, the first used from 1851 to the 1870s,
another from the 1870s to 1891, and two more subsequently. Tickets were also
issued for rifas or raffles, probably provincial or local lotteries, such as
Cavite 1883, Bolinao (then under Zambales) 1885, Manila 1889.

Spanish period tickets at the moment fetch from PhP 2,000
to 4,000 each, although they may go up as more studies are done.

1891 Real Loteria Filipina similar the to winning lottery ticket of Jose Rizal

Jose Rizal and
his family always bought lottery tickets. By sheer persistence Rizal won second prize on the number
9763. He shared the ticket with Ricardo
Carcinero, Politico-Military Governor of Dapitan. According to Carcinero in
a letter dated October 1892, "Three of us own the ticket in equal parts:
Rizal, a Spaniard residing in Dipolog called Francisco Equilor, and I. .. “
They each netted (after taxes?) P6,200
each.

Source: Metro acquire.

Prizes for the wining lottery tickets in 1897

HISTORY of the Philippine Lottery and Sweepstakes

By Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office

THE BEGINNING OF LOTTERIES IN THE PHILIPPINES

1895, 1896 and 1897 Lottery Tickets

Historically, lotteries have been in existence in the
Philippines as early as 1833. Under the auspices of private enterprises called
Empresa de Reales Loteria Espanolas de Filipinas, the Spanish Government
conducted loterias to generate revenues. In fact, our own national hero Dr.
Jose Rizal won Php 6,200.00 in the draw of 1892, while on exile in Dapitan. He
donated his winnings to an educational project. This altruistic act gives an
inkling of what could be done if the lottery was harnessed for charitable and
social welfare projects.

With the outbreak of the Philippine Revolution, the loteria
was forced to stop operations. And it was not until the early 1930s that the
idea of holding lottery games was revived. In 1932, the first Sweepstakes draw
was conducted by the government to raise funds to support sports projects for
the Filipino youth through the Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation (PAAF) –
the beneficiary of the first draw.

The PAAF Sweepstakes was successful so Philippine government
decided to conduct more draws for the benefit of the Philippine
Anti-Tuberculosis Society, now the Philippine Tuberculosis Society (PTS). The
draws were held under the auspices of an organization called the National
Charity Sweepstakes.

1937 Dec. Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Ticket

THE NEW SWEEPSTAKES AGENCY

Rather than limit the sweepstakes to the benefit of the
youth or to fighting tuberculosis, the country’s legislators thought of
institutionalizing the Sweepstakes as a new venture of raising funds for the
promotion of public health and general welfare.

By March 1935, then President Manuel L. Quezon approved Act
4130 – the law passed by the Philippine Legislature in October 30, 1934
creating the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes, replacing the then National
Charity Sweepstakes. Under this law, the new organization was authorized to
secure from the National Treasury a loan amounting to Php250,000.00, the
minimum amount required for organizing the office and printing the tickets for
the draw.

On September 8, 1935, the new agency held its first
Sweepstakes draw. Needless to say, the loan was paid back in less than two
months and shortly after the note was signed, proceeds from the sales started
pouring in. The mandate of the Sweepstakes found acceptance among the Filipino
people; its humanitarian mission readily won public trust and support.

1930's Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Tickets

Among its beneficiaries then were the Philippine Amateur
Athletic Federation (PAAF), the Philippine Tuberculosis Society (PTS), the
National Federation of Women’s Clubs, the Association de Damas de Filipinas,
the Gota de Leche, the Associate of Manila and the Provinces, the Philippine
Council of Boy Scouts of America, the Asilo Para Invalidos de los Veteranos de
la Revolucion, the Child Welfare Center and other institutions and
organizations engaged in charitable and health work, or work for the
improvement of the conditions of the indigent Filipino masses.

On June 18,1954, Republic Act 1169 was enacted into law
providing for charity sweepstakes and lotteries once a month when there are no
Sweepstakes draws and races.

The PCSO has since remained to be an indispensable charity
arm of the government, frequently summoned to provide funding for essential
health and welfare activities and projects nationwide.

BIGGER SHARE FOR CHARITY

1950's Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Tickets

In September 1979, Batas Pambansa Blg.42 was enacted into
law amending the PCSO Charter (RA 1169). The law raised the fund allocation for
the agency’s Charity Fund from the previous 25% of net sales to 30%, while 55%
now went to prizes and the remaining 15% for operations. On top of the 30%
share from net receipts, all unclaimed prizes go to the Charity Fund.

Since then, the frequency of draws was also increased. Draws
were held every week all year round, not to mention the special draws like the
Php20 million – Freedom Draw held every February 25, the Php5 million draws,
and the Php25 million – Christmas Draws. Despite the notable up-trend in
sweepstakes activity, the growing number of requests for greater financial
assistance from all over the country has been outstripping the earnings from
ticket sales.

During the administration of then President Fidel V. Ramos,
the PCSO was mandated to undertake a very important mission: to support
government’s rehabilitation program for the areas devastated by the Mt.
Pinatubo eruption. As an adjunct to this, President Ramos issued Proclamation
No. 51, “Exhorting the public and private sectors to support the PCSO Special
Pinatubo Lottery Draw scheduled on October 22, 1992 to raise charity funds for
the victims of the Mt. Pinatubo eruption.” That was the first of a series of
draws the PCSO had embarked on to raise the Php 350 million which was disbursed
later to the President’s Calamity Fund.

1950 -1970's Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Tickets

On February 14,1993, the PCSO conducted the first of a
series of draws to support the Cordillera Autonomous Region Livelihood Project
– a project that provides our Filipino brothers and sisters in the Cordilleras
the opportunity to work and to develop themselves as productive entrepreneurs
of the community.

As embodied in its charter, the PCSO’s primary objective is
to provide funds for health programs, medical assistance and services and
charities of national character. The PCSO’s mandate sets the pace for the
development of community health care in all the regional hospitals nationwide
through the establishment of Tuberculosis Centers, Cancer and Pain Centers, and
Dialysis Centers that deliver vital medical assistance and services to the
people.